On a summer day, an athlete dives into open water. The surface looks calm, the performance precise, the moment almost timeless. But beneath that surface: warming currents, shifting ecosystems, pollution, there is a different story unfolding.
Sport has always depended on nature. Today, that relationship is becoming harder to ignore. From overheated stadiums to disappearing coastlines, from polluted rivers to powerful athlete activism, the intersection between sport and the environment is no longer peripheral—it is structural. Even mainstream media, such as The Guardian, has recently launched a dedicated newsletter exploring exactly this connection, a sign that the conversation has reached a new level of urgency…
Source: Healthy Seas Foundation
Healthy Seas Foundation | Press Releases
- Sport and Ocean Conservation: Impacts, Challenges and New Opportunities
- Circular Economy Starts in the Classroom
- The Ocean Starts Here: World Ocean Day with arena and Alex Portal in Libourne
- Divers Removing Ghost Nets Capture First Underwater Footage of Great White Shark in the Mediterranean
- Healthy Seas Pushes Accountability Forward in Ghost Farms Case in Greece
- From Hong Kong to India: DWS Employees Take Action for Cleaner Waters
- Why Biodiversity Loss Cannot Be Measured by the Weight of Marine Litter
- Healthy Seas Brings the Ghost Farms Conversation to the Greek Aquaculture Congress
- Plankton: The Invisible Foundation of Life on Earth
- Healthy Seas and GAMOMAT Support ghost net removal in Spain’s Bolets PEIN area
